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The moment that changed Afghanistan

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The moment that changed Afghanistan

The problems ailing Afghanistan began with America's decision to intervene in the country following the Soviet invasion in 1979

Stephen Kinzer

guardian.co.uk, Monday 28 December 2009 11.00 GMT

This week marks the 30th anniversary of the fateful decision, little noted at the time, that drew the US into its Afghanistan quagmire. If the current Afghan crisis can be said to have begun at any single moment, it was in the last week of 1979.


At dusk on Christmas Eve, following orders from President Leonid Brezhnev, units of the Soviet army crossed pontoon bridges over the Amu Darya river into Afghanistan. Brezhnev's decision was a catastrophic error that not only deeply damaged his country but also contributed to its extinction as a nation state. History is beginning to suggest, though, that decisions made in Washington during that week were just as tragically shortsighted.


One way for the US to have reacted to the Soviet invasion would have been to cheer the Soviets' stupidity and wait patiently for Afghan resistance fighters to do their duty to history. This would have been a prudent, restrained policy, one of limited ambition and risk. It would have kept the US out of a dangerous place where it had not previously been entangled and which it did not know well.


Instead the US chose the opposite path: hyperactive engagement. The CIA launched its biggest operation ever, pouring billions of dollars into the Afghan resistance, matched dollar-for-dollar by Saudi Arabia. This operation contributed decisively to the Soviet defeat, culminating in the Red Army's retreat back across the Amu Darya in 1988.


America's decision to escalate this war also had other effects that only became clear later. It brought tens of thousands of foreign fighters, including Osama bin Laden, to the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. With them these outsiders brought harsh forms of Islamic fundamentalism that had been little known in Afghanistan. Their influence – Wahhabi fanaticism preached to Afghan resistance fighters in a war paid for by the US and Saudi Arabia – gave birth to the Taliban. Pakistan served as eager midwife and quickly turned the Taliban into its proxy force in Afghanistan. Once in power, the Taliban offered a safe haven to al-Qaida, which prepared the September 11 attacks there.


America's decision to plunge into Afghanistan 30 years ago also made the US an ally of Pakistan's reactionary military dictator, Muhammad Zia al-Haq. The CIA needed bases for its anti-Soviet army, and therefore required Zia's cooperation. No one seemed to care that he had recently hanged the elected prime minister he overthrew, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, or that his two transcendent goals for Pakistan were creating a "pure Islamic order" and building nuclear weapons.


Thanks to the marvels of declassification, we now know precisely when America's engagement in Afghanistan was set in motion. It was on 26 December 1979, just two days after the Soviet invasion. President Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, sent him a memo entitled "Reflections on Soviet intervention in Afghanistan". Carter endorsed it, and soon the CIA was funnelling huge amounts of money through Pakistan to fundamentalist warlords. A year later, after Ronald Reagan replaced Carter, American involvement further deepened.


"It is essential that Afghanistan's resistance continues," Brzezinksi wrote in his historic memo:


This means more money as well as arms shipments to the rebels, and some technical advice. To make the above possible, we must both reassure Pakistan and encourage it to help the rebels. This will require a review of our policy toward Pakistan, more guarantees to it, more arms aid and, alas, a decision that our security policy toward Pakistan cannot be dictated by our nonproliferation policy.


Until that moment, the US had been closely monitoring Pakistan's nuclear programme and blocking it whenever possible. As soon as Washington signalled to General Zia that it would stop monitoring the program in exchange for his help with the anti-Soviet war, he launched a global effort, led by AQ Khan, to assemble nuclear technology and fuel. Less than 20 years later, Pakistan successfully tested its first nuclear weapon.


Like so many American decisions to intervene in foreign lands, the decision in December 1979 to plunge into Afghanistan was made without serious consideration of the long-term consequences. It produced an apparent success that, with the passage of time, has come to look not much like a success after all.
 
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I think Afghanistan was a better place under the soviet rule - They had proper universities , courts , Roads , Hospitals.

Afghans might be ruing for their misery brought by the Warlords - Northern Alliance and Taliban.
 
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it was only good for the people in the cities. for the people in the villages life has not changed for hundreds of years. The reason why the resistance started was not because the soviets entered afghanistan it started when the central government in kabul actually tried to change the ways the people in the villages led their lives.
 
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I think Afghanistan was a better place under the soviet rule - They had proper universities , courts , Roads , Hospitals.

Afghans might be ruing for their misery brought by the Warlords - Northern Alliance and Taliban.

No one wants to live under a foreign rule, it is human nature.
We of the sub continent know this all too well...

It maybe that they were financially better off but that was not the case in most of Afghanistan and the hate for Russian dominated government outweighed the economic benefits...

Not to mention that later on this hate was backed up by billions of dollars to kick the proverbial commie butt...
 
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I think Afghanistan was a better place under the soviet rule - They had proper universities , courts , Roads , Hospitals.

Afghans might be ruing for their misery brought by the Warlords - Northern Alliance and Taliban.

By this sense India was better under British rule..better education,less corruption,Roads,bridges,railways etc etc..then why we wanted freedom??the answer is simple.no body wanted to be under a foreign invader..Every country has its own dignity and they will fight for saving it ..
 
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The moment that changed Afghanistan

The problems ailing Afghanistan began with America's decision to intervene in the country following the Soviet invasion in 1979

Stephen Kinzer

guardian.co.uk, Monday 28 December 2009 11.00 GMT

This week marks the 30th anniversary of the fateful decision, little noted at the time, that drew the US into its Afghanistan quagmire. If the current Afghan crisis can be said to have begun at any single moment, it was in the last week of 1979.


At dusk on Christmas Eve, following orders from President Leonid Brezhnev, units of the Soviet army crossed pontoon bridges over the Amu Darya river into Afghanistan. Brezhnev's decision was a catastrophic error that not only deeply damaged his country but also contributed to its extinction as a nation state. History is beginning to suggest, though, that decisions made in Washington during that week were just as tragically shortsighted.


One way for the US to have reacted to the Soviet invasion would have been to cheer the Soviets' stupidity and wait patiently for Afghan resistance fighters to do their duty to history. This would have been a prudent, restrained policy, one of limited ambition and risk. It would have kept the US out of a dangerous place where it had not previously been entangled and which it did not know well.


Instead the US chose the opposite path: hyperactive engagement. The CIA launched its biggest operation ever, pouring billions of dollars into the Afghan resistance, matched dollar-for-dollar by Saudi Arabia. This operation contributed decisively to the Soviet defeat, culminating in the Red Army's retreat back across the Amu Darya in 1988.


America's decision to escalate this war also had other effects that only became clear later. It brought tens of thousands of foreign fighters, including Osama bin Laden, to the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. With them these outsiders brought harsh forms of Islamic fundamentalism that had been little known in Afghanistan. Their influence – Wahhabi fanaticism preached to Afghan resistance fighters in a war paid for by the US and Saudi Arabia – gave birth to the Taliban. Pakistan served as eager midwife and quickly turned the Taliban into its proxy force in Afghanistan. Once in power, the Taliban offered a safe haven to al-Qaida, which prepared the September 11 attacks there.


America's decision to plunge into Afghanistan 30 years ago also made the US an ally of Pakistan's reactionary military dictator, Muhammad Zia al-Haq. The CIA needed bases for its anti-Soviet army, and therefore required Zia's cooperation. No one seemed to care that he had recently hanged the elected prime minister he overthrew, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, or that his two transcendent goals for Pakistan were creating a "pure Islamic order" and building nuclear weapons.


Thanks to the marvels of declassification, we now know precisely when America's engagement in Afghanistan was set in motion. It was on 26 December 1979, just two days after the Soviet invasion. President Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, sent him a memo entitled "Reflections on Soviet intervention in Afghanistan". Carter endorsed it, and soon the CIA was funnelling huge amounts of money through Pakistan to fundamentalist warlords. A year later, after Ronald Reagan replaced Carter, American involvement further deepened.


"It is essential that Afghanistan's resistance continues," Brzezinksi wrote in his historic memo:


This means more money as well as arms shipments to the rebels, and some technical advice. To make the above possible, we must both reassure Pakistan and encourage it to help the rebels. This will require a review of our policy toward Pakistan, more guarantees to it, more arms aid and, alas, a decision that our security policy toward Pakistan cannot be dictated by our nonproliferation policy.


Until that moment, the US had been closely monitoring Pakistan's nuclear programme and blocking it whenever possible. As soon as Washington signalled to General Zia that it would stop monitoring the program in exchange for his help with the anti-Soviet war, he launched a global effort, led by AQ Khan, to assemble nuclear technology and fuel. Less than 20 years later, Pakistan successfully tested its first nuclear weapon.


Like so many American decisions to intervene in foreign lands, the decision in December 1979 to plunge into Afghanistan was made without serious consideration of the long-term consequences. It produced an apparent success that, with the passage of time, has come to look not much like a success after all.


CIA intervention in Afghanistan throw Pakistan predate soviet invasion of Afghanistan. It was Bhotto who bankroll encouraged and trained the islamist in order to use them against Pashton nationalist...Gulbodin Hakmatyar, and Ahmad Shah Massod are actual were trained in PA camp by General Babur.... this was done with full US support because of left leaning of afghan gov of Doud Shah.
The moment that changed not only Afghanistan but whole regions is when Pakistan gov decided to use wahabi/dewbandi islamist as arm of their foreign policy...this destroyed the Sufi based islam of people of regions and also allow the Wahabi of Saudi a foot hold.
 
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I think Afghanistan was a better place under the soviet rule - They had proper universities , courts , Roads , Hospitals.

Afghans might be ruing for their misery brought by the Warlords - Northern Alliance and Taliban.

I know you would say that...your an Indian..all your institutions and systems were created by your old master Ghora Saheeb.
 
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it was only good for the people in the cities. for the people in the villages life has not changed for hundreds of years. The reason why the resistance started was not because the soviets entered afghanistan it started when the central government in kabul actually tried to change the ways the people in the villages led their lives.

On contrary the land redistribution and policy of communist government of Amin/Tarki was popular(pre-soviet invasion)..the little resistance by village people were flamed by secret serviced of pakistan(full backing of CIA) and even that of Iran. Pakistan being a feudal base society saw the socialist gov in Kabul as enemy thus unleashed the fanatics proxies to undermine the gov. All in all if the soviet hadn't invaded by killing Afghan president Amin, the socialist afghans would been successful in bring drastic changes. Land reform and redistribution, mandatory education for both genders, giving women full rights, even to divorce husband which is not allowed under Sharia were few laws that could had remarkable effect on society.
 
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I know you would say that...your an Indian..all your institutions and systems were created by your old master Ghora Saheeb.

Look at the present condition and compare the situation then to the present one.

At least they were living like people with dignity and hope.
 
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